First Eucharist 2020 Parent Booklet 2
First Eucharist 2020 Parent Booklet 2
First Eucharist 2020 Parent Booklet 2
Parent Booklet
St Emilie’s,
Canningvale August
2020
Loving God
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Dear Families,
Amidst COVID restrictions, rather than attending a one hour
face-to-face Eucharist Workshop, we have created a powerpoint
presentation, which will guide you and your child through the
workshop. It also contains links to short, child-friendly, online movie
clips. This can be conducted in the comfort of your own home, at a time
that suits you and your family. You may choose to do it as a one hour
session, or you may prefer to divide it across a number of shorter time
slots. No matter how you choose to do this, you are asked to please read,
view, discuss, pray and engage with your child, prior to them making their
First Eucharist on the date/time that you have signed up for.
This continues to be a very important time in your family’s life with Jesus Christ and His Church. The preparation
time for First Eucharist marks another important step in your child’s formation in the Catholic faith. What a
wonderful privilege it is for you to talk to your son or
daughter about your relationship with Jesus; to teach them how much God
loves them and how Jesus, the Bread of Life sustains us for the Christian
journey!
Your child is such a gift and you know this most of all. You have held them
in your arms; you have enjoyed their earliest attempts to walk, to dance, to
climb; to learn. You have delighted in their developing sense of humour and in
their personality. You love them and they are a daily reminder of the joyful gift
of life itself!
As parents, we can't take away every sadness or sorrow from the life of our son
or daughter. We can't promise them a world where there won't be
disappointments. We can't love them or care for them as
perfectly as we would want to and we can't love them infinitely,
it's impossible - but God can and does! And this is the gift of
their First Communion. At every Mass, Jesus becomes entirely
and absolutely present among us. Jesus Christ, who is God's
total and absolute Love made flesh. As human beings we can't
love like this. Yet, in the Eucharist, we receive Christ's Body and
Blood so that we can experience this kind of infinite love. The
love that we desire more than anything at all is given to us, to
become one with us through eating and drinking, to change
us forever, into this very same gift of love for the world.
Passing on the Church’s faith in the love of God and the values taught to us by Jesus Christ, are among the most
important things you can do as a parent. Sharing the faith with your child, helps them to become the person that God
has created them to be. The home is the primary place where faith is cultivated. Parents are their child’s primary
example of how to live as a Christian and you remain instrumental to your child’s spiritual formation throughout life.
As expressed in the words of every baptismal liturgy, the handing on of the faith is primarily the responsibility
of parents and you are described as the first and best teachers of your children in the ways of faith. You are not
alone in this role - you have the parish and your school to guide, support and encourage you. May God bless you and
your family abundantly at this special time in your child’s faith journey. Regards,
Tania Thuijs Stuart Munro Lyn Harkins
Principal Assistant Principal Catechist Coordinator
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Background Reading/Resources for Parents
As a parent of a child about to receive the Sacrament of Eucharist, the goal of this presentation is to
support you:
- to nurture your child’s relationship with Jesus Christ.
- To nurture an appreciation of the Sacrament of Eucharist as a way to further experience God’s great love
for us.
- To re-emphasise the importance of the Eucharist as being food for our journey so that we can be
‘Good News’ and serve others in our families, school, community and world.
Link to the Booklet and two Powerpoints that accompany this booklet:
http://web.stemiliescps.wa.edu.au/?p=35101&preview=true
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The Eucharist is “the source and summit of the Christian life”. In the Eucharistic Liturgy and our prayer
before the Blessed Sacrament, we encounter God’s presence in personal and profound ways.
The Eucharist is also a social encounter, celebrated as a community, teaching us about human dignity, and calling
us to right relationship with God, ourselves, and others.
As the Body of Christ, the Eucharist sends us on a mission to help transform our families, our
communities, and our world.
❖ Challenging us to recognize and confront the brokenness and sin in our own life and in the world
❖ Preparing us for our mission to serve others
❖ Propelling us forth to transform the world
The Mass is a memorial of the sacrifice Jesus offered God the Father at the Last Supper. During that meal, Jesus
instituted the Eucharist and told his followers, “Do this in memory of Me.”
Although the Eucharist is a mystery, we, as Catholics, accept on faith, the fact that bread and wine become the body
and blood of Jesus, because Jesus told us this is so. “The whole Christ is truly present, body, blood, soul, and divinity,
under the appearances of bread and wine.” The Eucharist is the source and summit of the Christian life; it is
Jesus himself (Catechism of the Catholic Church 1324, 1374).
The Eucharist is Jesus’ true presence here on earth. At Mass, we come together as a community, the Body of
Christ, to worship and to receive His presence into ourselves.
The word 'communion' means ‘to be united with’ and the word Eucharist comes from a Greek word meaning
‘thanksgiving’. In this sacrament, Christ is really present as the bread of life and the cup of eternal salvation nourishing us
on our pilgrim journey. The Eucharist completes the Christian Initiation, in the Eucharist, Christ is truly present among
us, especially through the change of the bread and wine into Christ's body and blood. By sharing in the body and blood,
we are united more deeply with Christ and become his presence in the world.
Eucharist is the sacrament that completes the process of initiation (along with Baptism and Confirmation). and is when
one can fully participate in the Eucharist by receiving Holy Communion. Eucharist is unique among the sacraments as it
is at the heart of our faith. For Catholics, the Eucharist, or Mass, is the most powerful way we encounter the real presence
of Jesus Christ. Each weekend we gather to celebrate the Eucharist, the ritual in which, by the power of the Holy Spirit,
bread and wine are transformed into the Body and Blood of Christ. We who celebrate are also transformed,
becoming Christ’s presence to others, and recognising the presence of Christ in others.
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Reconciliation before Eucharist
The church requires that a child receives the Sacrament of Reconciliation before receiving First Eucharist. Even though
your child has a sense of right and wrong, he or she has a limited understanding of what sin is. It is important that a child's
image of God is of a loving God and that the experience of reconciliation is a positive experience, where the child knows
that he or she is greatly loved and forgiven by God and loved and valued by the whole faith community.
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Jesus is present in the Eucharist?
We cannot see Jesus, but there are many things in life we do not see, but they exist and are essential. For example: we do
not see our reason, yet we have reason. We do not see our intelligence and we have it. We do not see our soul and yet it
exists and we see its effects, because we can speak, think and make decisions. We do not see an electric current, yet we
see that it exists; We do not see the very deepest things, those that really sustain life and the world, but we can see and
feel their effects. So it is with the Risen Lord: We do not see him with our eyes, but we see that wherever Jesus is, people
change, they improve and a greater capacity for peace, for reconciliation and for love is created. Therefore, we do not see
the Lord himself, but we see the effects of the Lord and can know that Jesus is present. The invisible things are the most
profound and the most important.
2. Talk together. Tell stories about your God times. Use scripture stories and answer their questions, even the
ones they’re not asking!
3. Stress the connection of Baptism and Eucharist. Get out your photo albums and recall your child’s
baptism. Unpack the baptismal garment and tell its history: when and where you bought it or who made it and
who else wore it. The sacraments of Christian initiation – Baptism, Eucharist and Confirmation – lay the
foundations of every Christian life. We are born anew by Baptism, we receive the food of eternal life in the
Eucharist and we are strengthened on the journey by the Sacrament of Confirmation.
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4. Try to use family meal times to remind children of the connection of the family meal to the Eucharist. Let
your child decorate the table for an evening meal. Talk about special meals your family has shared. The basics of
the Eucharist include four actions: 1. Take 2. Bless 3. Break and 4. Share. Every meal, whether in the
home or the church, should be deepening our faith in Jesus Christ and in his mission. Jesus’ basic mission was to
serve the poor. When we eat and drink the Body and Blood of Christ, we stand for Christ. We stand for
mission. We stand for justice. Christian meal sharing, if it is to be a celebration of Jesus Christ, is always about
living out Gospel values in our everyday life.
5. Pray with your child and as a family. Pray often and as a natural part of family life: mealtimes,
bedtimes, happy times, worrisome times, after an argument, when someone is in trouble, and on special
occasions. Make prayer a natural part of your family life.
6. Make Mass a family event. For Catholics, one of the most important things we do is coming
together to celebrate Mass each week. The Eucharist is the heart and soul of our worship of God. It is the
celebration that gives us the strength we need to live a Christian life. God doesn’t call us to church on Sunday
because he has a need for us all to fall down and worship him at nine o’clock each Sunday morning. It isn’t
designed to help him; it’s designed to help us. The Mass is filled with riches. It is an unfathomable gift. Point out
one or two things each week for your child to watch for at Mass. Talk about the homily on the way home. Before
the liturgy talk with your family about who you want to pray for during the General Intercessions; and what you
want to thank God for during the Eucharistic Prayer.
7. Grow together in appreciation of God’s Word. Read the scriptures you will hear at Mass. What is God
saying to your family this weekend?
8. Take a tour of the church. Point out to your child where he or she was baptized, show him or her the altar
up close, the tabernacle, the oils, etc.
9. The Catechism of the Catholic Church reminds us the Eucharist commits us to the poor (#1397.) Get
your children involved in being bread for others - make a meal for a neighbour in need, sort through toys
and clothing for gifts to the poor, visit a nursing home, give to a charitable donation.
10. Keep First Communion in perspective - it is of course very special because it is ‘first’, however it
hopefully will be the first Communion and not the last! It is important that children have an opportunity to
attend Mass regularly. Their Holy Communion day will be the first of a lifetime of coming to the Lord’s
Table of Love. Choose a gift wisely - choose something that will help them remember this day in a special
way. Try to find something that will help them grow spiritually.
11. Discuss the Eucharist as a gift. Special occasions remind us of an important time in our lives. Gifts sent at
a time of sadness remind us that we are not alone, but are supported by the love of others. Farewell gifts are
important to us and are greatly treasured. A gift which is given by someone we love, but from whom we are now
separated is a constant reminder of the love we knew and still feel. Seeing that gift, we feel united with the
person who gave it. The gift reminds us that even though we are now apart, our love still lives on.
All of the current research supports this fact: you are the number one influence on your child’s faith formation,
and in practicing the faith! They look to you for guidance and example as they grow to adulthood.
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If you are more focused on the dress or suit, the cake and the party, then it follows that your child will be focused on those
things as well. Try to really reflect on being the example to your child of what it means to live a good and
authentic Christian life, with all its challenges, imperfections, difficulties, stresses, joys, sorrows and more. Take time
in your own life to study the meaning of the Eucharist and reignite your own passion for this gift. We suggest reflecting
on John 6 during your personal prayer time in leading up to your child’s First Holy Communion. Turn your attention to
preparing your hearts, minds, and souls for this special day. Don’t stress about the minor details of a party or spend
all your energy on things of this world. You can do it!
EXTRA RESOURCES
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Prayers for you and your Children
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Eucharist Workshop
Guide for Parents
Practical Considerations
Timing is Everything
We get that family life is very busy, which is why we have made a workshop experience that
you and your child can do in your own home, in your own time.
All you need to do is plan for either an uninterrupted hour, or a series of 4 x 15 minute time slots
between now and when your child makes the Sacrament, to work through this experience with
your child.
Get Comfortable
Think about making the space where you and your child sit together comfortable and cosy.
You might light a candle and together set up a small sacred space to mark this time together as
special.
Your child could make their own cross and collect some flowers from the garden. Ideally wherever you sit
you are away from tv, other siblings and any other loud noise or distractions.
Parent Booklet
While the PPT slides are self-explanatory to work through, a few notes have been added to the Parent Notes below to
support you in your conversations with your child.
Think Positively
The time and effort you give to working through the prayer, slides, movie clips, and discussions with your child are best
seen as ‘an opportunity’ rather than an obligation. Try to make this time a special bonding time for you and your child,
where they will hear you share your insights, wisdom and love.
Relax, enjoy and may God bless you at this very special time in your child’s life.
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Let’s Begin … Powerpoint Slides and Commentary for Parents
Slide 4:
Read the text. Talk about how receiving Jesus for the first
time is a very special gift.
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Slide 7 - Sundays are Special
Play Movie Clip.
One of the commandments is that we keep Sunday as a holy day of
rest and worship. This clip reinforces how Sunday is a special
day. This clip focuses on caring for ourselves, going to Mass and
receiving Jesus in the Eucharist.
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Slide 19 - Holy Communion
Play Movie clip.
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If you have time, look at the Mass Responses PPT and read through these slides.
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